docwebster ([personal profile] docwebster) wrote2004-03-15 07:40 pm

Radio Nosferatu - A query

As most of you know, I (and the rest of our merry band) have been running Radio Nosferatu for about two years now. In all that time, I think our highest number of listeners has been six. That's a whole lot of money and a whole lot of time put in and for next to no listener feedback.

Most times, the only listener is our own Smoky, and that because it's his machine out there on the left coast that's our dedicated machine.

I'm forced to ask myself, is it because of our format? It's 90 percent gothic/industrial, with a few other bits and bobs thrown in. The reason I ask myself about that is, there's ten million other stations out there doing exactly what we're doing (and doing it as well or better than us in most cases), and most of those have very loyal dedicated listener bases that just aren't going to switch.

My question is this - and bear in mind this is only a question - do you think we'd reach a broader audience if we played a broader range of styles? For a long time now, my friends and I have been doing "Radio Free Callahan's" on the weekends as a venue for playing our favorite tunes and have been having a lot of fun with it. As I sincerely doubt Spider would let us make money with the Callahan's name (and rightly so), I thought why not make it "Radio Harmony". It would be thus be named after the planet a certain member of that splendid fiction and their family come from and would thus pay tribute to the series without unduly impinging on Mr. Robinson's copyrights. It would also more closely reflect a quality I think is desperately needed in this benighted day and age.

This would open the station up to a far broader range of styles and listener bases (and thus advertising revenues, let's not kid ourselves) and fulfill a dream I've had for quite a long time now of having a sort of public access station for pretty much whoever wants to submit a program that doesn't irritate the hell out of me.

I'm in the process of getting the station all nice and legal via a licensing co-op, so just about anything could be played without getting our asses sued off.

I ABSOLUTELY NEED TO STRESS that I have not gone out and unilaterally changed the station. I wanted to throw this out for discussion, but I feel down deep in my heart that this would work better. But I absolutely want to hear what you good people think.

Let's talk

[identity profile] disgruntledgrrl.livejournal.com 2004-03-16 02:02 am (UTC)(link)
I steered a fresh faced angry youth named Paco towards you. (all sentences typed here will be jumbled or not really relating to one another as it is currently 6am CST).

I listened weekend before last, I was pointing out your station to him. Now that I see it's a sturdy connection and it's music I like I will be listening again. But honestly I forgot.
"Out of Site - Out of Mind" (not mispelled).

Advertising to get advertisers. I think this is the key. I got a decent goth collective here in Dallas and I can do some promotion. I think you should keep it Goth / Industrial. You've lost my fiance to a Russian Radio Webstation, but he likes dance/trance/world techno - basically he's in another basket. But he likes your Industrial collection.
Hmm. Tough to think but I'll just spit out this idea lest it disappear and I won't bother dressing it up.
Can I pay you air time to hold a show? I've written Adam a few radio sketch comedies. I'd hate for them to go to waste since the FreakShow doesn't seem to travel in the vein of spoofs.
If I did want to hold say an hour show on your station, how would I do it?

The beauty is if I have a show, I'll plug your station. This applies to all who wish to get a show. You approve which shows. I'm more than just a demonstration model for this idea. I'm interested in airtime on an established (ie all the software bits run fine from the website) WebStation.
So um right - need coffee.